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Anonymous User wrote:and there's no way you need to get that far from irvine to have a single for <2000.graduated from uc irvine last year with some friends still living around the area and there's definitely 1 BR's within commute distance (<10 miles) for <2000 in santa ana and costa mesa with tustin being a bit further

Trying to keep this thread helpful and bullshit free, so we're calling it out where we see it.

Okay helpful:

If you want to be within 20-25 minutes of the OC office locations, you can expect to spend ~$2000 for a 1br. Sure, you can find things that are cheaper but I wouldn't live there. 2br right next to (within 5 min. drive) the Costa Mesa or Irvine offices will be ~$2700. Probably closer to $3200 to live in Newport (again 2br).

Trying to keep this thread helpful and bullshit free, so we're calling it out where we see it.

Okay helpful:

If you want to be within 20-25 minutes of the OC office locations, you can expect to spend ~$2000 for a 1br. Sure, you can find things that are cheaper but I wouldn't live there. 2br right next to (within 5 min. drive) the Costa Mesa or Irvine offices will be ~$2700. Probably closer to $3200 to live in Newport (again 2br).

Trying to keep this thread helpful and bullshit free, so we're calling it out where we see it.

Okay helpful:

If you want to be within 20-25 minutes of the OC office locations, you can expect to spend ~$2000 for a 1br. Sure, you can find things that are cheaper but I wouldn't live there. 2br right next to (within 5 min. drive) the Costa Mesa or Irvine offices will be ~$2700. Probably closer to $3200 to live in Newport (again 2br).

They won't be as nice and it's not like you'll find anything good for like 1k but 1br apartments are pretty widely available for under 2k within reasonable distance of Irvine and Costa Mesa offices of firms. Just not if you're looking at prime locations (like the new residences on Jamboree that probably puts you within 5min drive of several biglaw offices) or fancy places towards newport beach/corona del mar (like Park Newport or newport bluffs).

lolwat wrote:They won't be as nice and it's not like you'll find anything good for like 1k but 1br apartments are pretty widely available for under 2k within reasonable distance of Irvine and Costa Mesa offices of firms. Just not if you're looking at prime locations (like the new residences on Jamboree that probably puts you within 5min drive of several biglaw offices) or fancy places towards newport beach/corona del mar (like Park Newport or newport bluffs).

Bro you add "Park" or "Bluffs" to the name of a property and it immediately increases rent by 27.4% compared to similarly situated apartments without "Park" or "Bluffs" in their name. It's just science.

lolwat wrote:They won't be as nice and it's not like you'll find anything good for like 1k but 1br apartments are pretty widely available for under 2k within reasonable distance of Irvine and Costa Mesa offices of firms. Just not if you're looking at prime locations (like the new residences on Jamboree that probably puts you within 5min drive of several biglaw offices) or fancy places towards newport beach/corona del mar (like Park Newport or newport bluffs).

Bro you add "Park" or "Bluffs" to the name of a property and it immediately increases rent by 27.4% compared to similarly situated apartments without "Park" or "Bluffs" in their name. It's just science.

Haha this is true. Although i have visited those apartments in the somewhat distant past and they are seriously like resorts. So many goddamn amenities. If i remember right, newport bluffs is actually a gated apartment complex and you have to go through a guard to get in as a visitor. That kind of shit is great if people want to splurge a little living down there, but those are really the kinds of apts that have a $2k+ price tag.

Trying to keep this thread helpful and bullshit free, so we're calling it out where we see it.

Okay helpful:

If you want to be within 20-25 minutes of the OC office locations, you can expect to spend ~$2000 for a 1br. Sure, you can find things that are cheaper but I wouldn't live there. 2br right next to (within 5 min. drive) the Costa Mesa or Irvine offices will be ~$2700. Probably closer to $3200 to live in Newport (again 2br).

Trying to keep this thread helpful and bullshit free, so we're calling it out where we see it.

Okay helpful:

If you want to be within 20-25 minutes of the OC office locations, you can expect to spend ~$2000 for a 1br. Sure, you can find things that are cheaper but I wouldn't live there. 2br right next to (within 5 min. drive) the Costa Mesa or Irvine offices will be ~$2700. Probably closer to $3200 to live in Newport (again 2br).

just giving an example of a place that's literally <10 mins away from the OC offices that's <2k (and is resort-level to boot)

Sure, less than $2000 but your car is likely to be broken into and you will meet some interesting folks. As I said, you can find cheaper but I wouldn't recommend living there. Also, this particular apartment is hardly "resort-level."

Anonymous User wrote:Can anyone weigh in on Century City v. Downtown for a junior associate?

Pros and cons to both. Downtown has way more food/bar options nearby which can make lunches and happy hours a lot better. There are also far more affordable places to live in or near downtown (Silverlake, Los Feliz, Echo Park, etc.). Century City is a lot more polished and more of a bubble. Not too many food options within walking distance of the office, but it's much cleaner. Living near the office on the West Side is significantly more expensive, but generally, most young people prefer to live on the West Side, as there are better restaurants, bars, the beach and a lot of fun activities to do when you're not working. Expect to pay more, but you get what you pay for.

Having worked in both, I miss the food options downtown, but all things considered, I much more prefer Century City and the surrounding area.

Anonymous User wrote:Can anyone weigh in on Century City v. Downtown for a junior associate?

Pros and cons to both. Downtown has way more food/bar options nearby which can make lunches and happy hours a lot better. There are also far more affordable places to live in or near downtown (Silverlake, Los Feliz, Echo Park, etc.). Century City is a lot more polished and more of a bubble. Not too many food options within walking distance of the office, but it's much cleaner. Living near the office on the West Side is significantly more expensive, but generally, most young people prefer to live on the West Side, as there are better restaurants, bars, the beach and a lot of fun activities to do when you're not working. Expect to pay more, but you get what you pay for.

Having worked in both, I miss the food options downtown, but all things considered, I much more prefer Century City and the surrounding area.

Thank you for this description. Do you believe that office location should be a heavy factor when weighing options?

Anonymous User wrote:Can anyone weigh in on Century City v. Downtown for a junior associate?

Pros and cons to both. Downtown has way more food/bar options nearby which can make lunches and happy hours a lot better. There are also far more affordable places to live in or near downtown (Silverlake, Los Feliz, Echo Park, etc.). Century City is a lot more polished and more of a bubble. Not too many food options within walking distance of the office, but it's much cleaner. Living near the office on the West Side is significantly more expensive, but generally, most young people prefer to live on the West Side, as there are better restaurants, bars, the beach and a lot of fun activities to do when you're not working. Expect to pay more, but you get what you pay for.

Having worked in both, I miss the food options downtown, but all things considered, I much more prefer Century City and the surrounding area.

Agree with everything he said 100%.

Century City is blah compared to downtown, but not as horrible as working in, say, Orange County. The food options at Westfield Mall are getting better and better--La Colombe is decent coffee, Shake Shack, and Eataly opening in two months (as well as a new Chic Fil A and poke place). Not as good as what you get at Grand Central downtown or Far East Market in Chinatown, but great regardless.

Also, enough cannot be said about the commute options. I live on the westside and my commute to century city is about 20 minutes at worst and my commute to downtown was 50-60 minutes at worst, 20 minutes at best (if leaving the office very late).

Anonymous User wrote:Can anyone weigh in on Century City v. Downtown for a junior associate?

Pros and cons to both. Downtown has way more food/bar options nearby which can make lunches and happy hours a lot better. There are also far more affordable places to live in or near downtown (Silverlake, Los Feliz, Echo Park, etc.). Century City is a lot more polished and more of a bubble. Not too many food options within walking distance of the office, but it's much cleaner. Living near the office on the West Side is significantly more expensive, but generally, most young people prefer to live on the West Side, as there are better restaurants, bars, the beach and a lot of fun activities to do when you're not working. Expect to pay more, but you get what you pay for.

Having worked in both, I miss the food options downtown, but all things considered, I much more prefer Century City and the surrounding area.

Agree with everything he said 100%.

Century City is blah compared to downtown, but not as horrible as working in, say, Orange County. The food options at Westfield Mall are getting better and better--La Colombe is decent coffee, Shake Shack, and Eataly opening in two months (as well as a new Chic Fil A and poke place). Not as good as what you get at Grand Central downtown or Far East Market in Chinatown, but great regardless.

Also, enough cannot be said about the commute options. I live on the westside and my commute to century city is about 20 minutes at worst and my commute to downtown was 50-60 minutes at worst, 20 minutes at best (if leaving the office very late).

Also agree with everything said here. I work in Century City and live in Venice and my commute is normally 25 minutes. Food options definitely not as good, but if you work in Century City, you have the option of living West Side to the Mid-Cityish Area (WeHo, Beverly Hills Adjacent) and still have a good commute.

Just based on callback experience, seems like Century City would suck more

shrugemoji

I mean is anyone picking between actual equal options in both places? Even if it's diff offices of the same firm strikes me as v likely that one office has a higher center gravity for x or y type of work

I'd really encourage making decisions along that axis rather than preference between two not-that-far-apart locations in the same metro area tbh, if that applies to you. Sorry for answering a different question than the one asked, but just my take as a current lit assoc in LA. Offices can be pretty specialized anywhere but I think this is especially true in LA/CA where you have firms that have like 5 offices in a single metro all of which feel totally different.

entirely possible to actually be equal and location w/in LA is a factor, i am just a bit skeptical given that it's oci time

Just based on callback experience, seems like Century City would suck more

shrugemoji

I mean is anyone picking between actual equal options in both places? Even if it's diff offices of the same firm strikes me as v likely that one office has a higher center gravity for x or y type of work

I'd really encourage making decisions along that axis rather than preference between two not-that-far-apart locations in the same metro area tbh, if that applies to you. Sorry for answering a different question than the one asked, but just my take as a current lit assoc in LA. Offices can be pretty specialized anywhere but I think this is especially true in LA/CA where you have firms that have like 5 offices in a single metro all of which feel totally different.

entirely possible to actually be equal and location w/in LA is a factor, i am just a bit skeptical given that it's oci time

beepboopbeep wrote:I mean is anyone picking between actual equal options in both places? Even if it's diff offices of the same firm strikes me as v likely that one office has a higher center gravity for x or y type of work

Not necessarily true. My old firm had an office in downtown and an office in century city and there was substantial overlap. The other firms with two offices like this have overlap too. You end up working often for partners in both offices.

beepboopbeep wrote: Offices can be pretty specialized anywhere but I think this is especially true in LA/CA where you have firms that have like 5 offices in a single metro all of which feel totally different.

Please name one firm that has more than three offices (e.g. downtown, century city, santa monica/venice) in the LA metro area (also note that Orange County is not part of the LA metro area).